Author:
CHRISTENSEN H.,JORM A. F.,MACKINNON A. J.,KORTEN A. E.,JACOMB P. A.,HENDERSON A. S.,RODGERS B.
Abstract
Background. There is debate as to whether the elderly
are really at lower risk for depressive
disorders, or whether endorsement of symptoms is artefactually low. The
present paper assesses the
effects of age on anxiety and depression, and examines whether age has
direct effects on self-report
of individual symptoms independent of its effect on the underlying dimensions
of anxiety and
depression.Methods. Structural equation modelling was used to assess the
structure of the items and their
associations with age and a number of demographic variables. The sample
of 2622 participants aged
between 18 and 79 years from Canberra (Australia) was drawn from the Electoral
Roll. Two
instruments were used: the anxiety and depression scales of Goldberg et
al. (1988) and the Personal
Disturbance Scale from the DSSI of Bedford et al. (1976).Results. Both scales were found to fit satisfactorily to a
two factor model. Age correlated negatively
with depression. After controlling for the effects of gender, marital status,
education and financial
difficulty, direct effects of age were found on items from both instruments,
indicating that certain
depression items were associated with a differential probability of endorsement
in older people, even
when the level of depression was equal to that of younger people. Items
with direct age effects
reflected physical (feeling slowed down; waking early) and psychological
(hopeless about the future)
components of depression. Direct effects of age on items from both anxiety
scales were also found.Conclusions. The nature of the depression and anxiety experienced
by younger and older people may
differ qualitatively. Depression may be associated with an increase in
somatic symptoms linked to
physical changes and to an increase in endorsement of items which reflect
the narrowing of
opportunities in the long-term.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
207 articles.
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